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History of Computing in
Medicine
Beginnings
• 1950’s computers in bioengineering
• Early 1960’s
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Medline
Laboratory instrumentation computers (LINC)
MUMPS developed at MGH
GEMISCH (generalized medical information system
for community health at Duke)
(Stead MD)
• 1975 8080 processor – Altair 8800
• 1976 Apple Computers
Hackers: Steven Levy
Beginnings
• Initial application: automated patient
questionnaire (Slack: ‘55) 1965
– Patient centered computing
– Cybermedicine
• Center for Clinical Computing
– Dr. Slack maintained of Eliza that soliloquy, (with or without a
computer) can be a valuable tool of mental health. He wrote:
"Contrary to the common notion that soliloquy is a manifestation of
mental illness, we believe that it is normal behavior---behavior that
serves to help maintain emotional equilibrium."
Eliza
• Eliza (MIT 1960’s) initially designed as a
spoof vs. attempt to pass the Turing test
– Eliza
– Quack Eliza
MUMPS
• MGH utility multi-programming system
(Octo Barnett 1966)
– Thou shalt not declare variable types or file sizes.
– Thou shalt not KILL, except for globals and variables.
– Thou shalt not covet they neighbor's UCI (User Class
Identification = computing area).
– Remember string handling, for it shall make MUMPS special.
MUMPS
• Now known as M
– A programming language with extensive
tools for the support of database
management systems. MUMPS was
originally used for medical records and is
now widely used where multiple users
access the same databases
simultaneously, e.g. banks, stock
exchanges, travel agencies, hospitals.
MUMPS
• Language plus data structure
• Designed by MD’s and engineers
– Designed for medical environment
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Low computing power – data entry >>> computing
Flexible string structure
Inverted tree structure (sparse)
Multi-user environment
Interpreted
– More flexible, efficiency not necessary
MUMPS code
• f p=2,3:2 s q=1 x "f f=3:2 q:f*f>p!'q s
q=p#f" w:q p,?$x\8+1*8
– prints a table of primes, including code to
format it neatly into columns
Beginnings
• 1977 – Medical Informatics defined
– Discipline dealing with the problems associated with
information, its acquisition, analysis and dissemination
in the health care delivery process
• 1978 – DEC transitions from PDP to VAX
• 1980 – IBM PC (MS-DOS)
• 1982 – medical informatics definition expanded to
include care, education and research
Beginnings
• 1983 – Shortliffe “medical informatics covers
more than just applications of computers to
medicine”
• 1986
– Macintosh developed
– AAMC “medical informatics combines medical science
with several disciplines in the information and
computer sciences…and provides methodologies by
which these can contribute to better patient care”
Artificial Intelligence in
Medicine
• Clancey, Shortliffe (1984)
– Medical artificial intelligence is primarily concerned
with the construction of AI programs that perform
diagnosis and make therapy recommendations. Unlike
medical applications based on other programming
methods, such as purely statistical and probabilistic
methods, medical AI programs are based on symbolic
models of disease entities and their relationship to
patient factors and clinical manifestations
Early AIM
• Internist/QMR
– Designed at University of Pittsburgh
• Mycin, Oncocin
– Designed at Stanford by Shortliffe’s group
AIM
• Internist
– Designed to reproduce the behavior of a
diagnostician
Maturation of medical computing
History 1985-1995
• Emergence of HIS
– Financial information ahead of clinical
information
• Introduction of PC’s into offices (initially
for clerical use)
• PC’s on units for data output
– Statlan (DOS based – non Y2Kcompliant)
• Clinical information systems (CIS)
History 1995-present
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Internet medicine
Wiring of health systems
PC’s in MD’s offices
PC’s for order entry, web access etc.
Acquisition of large data bases
Now
• AI in medicine (nascent)
• Computers in the business of medicine
– Electronic billing (maturing)
• Information flow
– Lab, radiology (maturing)
– Medical Record (nascent)
• Patient care
– Intelligent monitoring (nascent)
Now
• Consumer awareness
– Information availability (growing rapidly)
– Quackery!!! (growing rapidlier)
• Efficiency gains
– Decreased personnel (nascent)
– Best/least costly practices (nascent)
– Information flow (nascent)
Current resources
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AMIA curriculum 2001
Health information resources on the web
IT Medical Literature
Newsgroups/chat rooms/support
Health news
Future
• Compare American (vs. Japanese) industry
in the late 1980’s
• Barriers